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The Daily Plainsman from Huron, South Dakota • Page 7

Location:
Huron, South Dakota
Issue Date:
Page:
7
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

MONDAY, MARCH 14, 1949 The HURONITE and THE DAILY PLAINSMAN. Huron. 5. D. PAGE SEVEN Resume Talks In Rail Dispute CHICAGO, Mar.

14 (UP)--Negotiators for the nation's railroads and 16 non-operating unions resumed sessions today to clear up. disputed wage-hour is-, VVQ6V sues not included in a binding and a reduction in the frision by mediators. work week from 48 to 40. hours were not revealed, but George chairman of the union committee, said the decision, at first glance, "was 75 per cent what we wanted." Both sides have agreed to be bound by the mediators' report. A TEMPERATURES Highest one year ago today The mediators were former Lowest one year ago today members 1 of a Presidential fact- Highest on record this date finding board which recommend- -J a seven-cent hourly wage in- Details of the mediators' reportjfor the 1,000,000 workers.

Both sides have, indicated POSITIVELY! ENDS TONITE TUiS. and WED. BRUTAL! a THE acceptance of these proposals. The increase would be retroactive to last Oct. 1 and the new work waek would start Sept.

1. The board's original recom- 36 1 75 Lowest on record this date -25 PRECIPITATION Total for this month' to date ,05 Normal for month to date .35 Total for this year to date 1.11 Normal for this year to date 1.45 Sunrise 6:48 a.m. Sunset 6:38 p.m. WEATHER FORECASTS HURON--Clearing and colder an estimated QOO annually. Rail representatives claimed the 40-hour week would ncessitate the hiring of an additional 83,761 workers.

cold Tuesday. A A ly cloudy, light snow, occasionally moderate west portion today, ac- jtiai i 1A Issues submitted to the media-jCompanied by northerly winds 10 tors at hearings last week 20 miles per hour, wind dimm- were concerned with putting the ishing and decreasing cloudiness 40-hour week into effect. tonight, becoming fair east. Part- It was understood that the unions generally won their demand t'or two consecutive days off. Not included in the mediators' ly cloudy Tuesday.

Colder today; Laurel And Hardy Plan To Unite Again By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD, Mar. 14 (fl 5 )There stood Oliver Hardy, chins and all, but something was missing. No Stan Laurel. For the second time in 23 years of existence, the famed comedy team of Laurel and Hardy has split up. I found round, firm and fully-packed Hardy in a buckskin outfit on the set of John Wayne's "A He admitted Strange that a Caravan." coucle of cows gave their lives to supply the costume.

I asked if his present role meant a permanent split with the wistful Laurel. Temporary Split no," Babe asserted. "This is just temporary until we get active again. In fact, my salary i i 4. an.1 again, j-jj.

acu-i, iJij high today 10 to 20. Colder to-j to our oint corpora tion. night, low tonight zero to 10 DC- incorporated since low. Continued cold Tuesday. DATA SURROUNDING STVTIONS Hi Lo Pre.

Bismarck, N. D. 19 report were disputes concerning monthly rated employes, a yardmasters. Leighty said these jmust be agreed upon before a final settlement is reached. He.

estimated another week would 111 42 required to bring about a final De 'i nes a I-J2 agreement (Huron, City 31 I Huron, airport 31 (Kansas' City, Mo. 46 New Orleans; La. 81 i Omaha, Neb. 36 Pa. 42 jWatertown 28 jPierre -27 Lemmon 23 ZANESVILLE, Mar.

14. (jpJiMobridge 28 --Four men, hunting for treasure.) Chadron. Neb. 32 i they believe Jesse James buried Sioux City, la. 33 near here, had doubts today about! Valentine, Neb.

28 i i it a mine 25 two-day search lias yielded'Miles City, Mont. 23 only an empty metal chest. City 23 The machine broke down yes-iPhilip 28 One of the treasure hunt- 1 'Plot Springs 26 jers, John Trammel, who says hejSioux Falls 32 is 109 and an old crony of 35 Men Search For Treasure Believed Buried By Bandits CREEK CHAPMAN aac jtvain robber, had this cxplana- I tinn: "James told his boys that some clay they'll have p. gadget to find buried treasure. He told them that he'd bury the treasure so no gadget would ever find it." In Austin, 101-year-old Frank Dalton, who claims he is the real Jesse James, pooh-poohed the Ohio search.

"Let them hunt their heads off if they want tcv' he said. "They're ijust wasting their time. They 'won't find anything certainly not a million dollars." Ballon claims that a man killed as Jesse James in Missouri in 1880s was not James. He announced himself as James several years ago. LAST TIMES TONIGHT ams TALK MMDB8INETT TUES.

WED. THUR. 2 BIG FEATURE HITS Meat Supplies I Continue Good CHICAGO, Mar. 14 (UP) -Meat "continues in good supply" throughout the nation and prices are down an average 20 per cent below the peaks of last summer, the American Meat Institute said today. The Institute noted that farm- were sending fewer meat ani- jmals to market, but said whole- isale prices on all meat on the basic markets in New York, Chi- jcagoand San Francisco are down from the all-time highs of last summer.

Round steak is down 30 per cent and chuck roast 28 per cent Brookings 35 Mitchell 35 Yankton -3 32 23 5 6 33 62 28 26 4 5 -1 3 8 21 15 -1 0 3 4 4 16 9 5 10 19 .00 .00 .00 .01 .02 .00 .00 .00 .00 We've 1935." RADIO On Dial: MBS 1340 KUV Huron. ABC-MBS 670 WNAX Vankton NBC 1320 KELO Sioux Falls NBC 1500 KSTP St. Paul CBS 830 WCCO Minneapolis' NEW YORK, Mar. 14. -Listening Tonight (Monday) NBC 7 Cavalacade drama, with Conrad Nagle; 8 Don Voorhees Concert; 8:30 I.

Q. Quiz; 9 Contented Concert; 9:30 Radio City Theater, "Weather Ahead." CBS 7 Inner Sanctum; 7:30 Godfrey Talent Scouts; 8 Rosalind Russell in "What A Woman;" 9 My Friend Irma." ABC 7 Gordon Macrae Show, "Eileen;" 8 Let's Go To Met; 8:30 Child's World, at new time; 9:30 On Trial discussion. MBS 7 Straight Arrow drama; 7:30 Sherlock Holmes; 9 American Formum. "North Atlantic Pact;" 9:30 Concert Hall. Tuesday Timetable: NBC 8:30 a.

m. Clevelandaires; 1 p. m. Double Or Nothing; 5:30 Sketches In Melody; 6:30 Dardanelle Trio; forming together in 1926. Until now they had only one professional division.

That was in 1935 9 Big CBS 9:30 a. Godfrey Hour; 12:30 p. m. Young Doc Malone; 5:15 You And the sionaJ. division, mat was in Campus; 6:15 Jack Smhh when they were working under 8:30 strike It Rich separate contracts to Hal Roach.

8 a Breakfast Club; 10:3 Stan had a dispute with the producer and left the. lot. Hardy had to finish out his con, tract and Roach put him into a thing called co-starring Billie Burke, Alice Brady and an elephant. The picture fell on its trunk, and Babe re- jijoined his teammate, i Their last Hollywood contract a with 20th-Fox. They quit be- .00 .09 cause of non-support.

"We can't carry a picture for all five or six reels," Babe said. "We needed 'QQ i talented people for romantic sup- '43! ports, but they were giving us unknowns." JQ! Regains Weight .01 .00 .00 .00 .60 French Flier Goes On Trial PARIS, Mar. 14. ocean flier Dieudonne Coste went on trial today as a spy. He was charged with having been one of the "best oaid" agents of German counter-intelligence, working in the United States during World War II.

Coste, who, with Maurice Bellante, made the first east-west flight over the Atlantic in 1930, denied he returned to the U. S. 13 years later to spy for Germany. "I never had any intention of betraying my country," he told the military court. The short, stocky, white-haired defendant termed the charges against him "entirely false." Coste, named the world's No.

3 League by the International of Aviation, claims he double-crossed the Nazis by serving as an American agent while supposedly working for the German Abwehr (German counter intelligence unit). The Paris-to-New York flight i a small single-engine monoplane made a sensational second only to Charles Lindbergh's epic crossing in 1927. Ted Malone Talks; 2 p. m. Ladies Be Seated; 4:30 Sky King drama; 9:30 It's In the Family MBS 11 Kate Smith Show; 1 p.

m. Queen For A Day; 3:15 Johnson! PARKSTON, Mar. 14. (UP) -Family; 6 Fulton Lewis, dragged the James Riv- Detective Story. Drag River For South Dakota Boy Huron temperature 8 a.

m. NOTICE Call 2537 for forecasts and Current temperatures and weather. Call 2053 for weather summaries. Bonilla Club To Present Play BONILLA, Mar. Jonson's Yob," a three-act' comedy by Lillian Mortimer, will be Huronian Flees Iowa Prison FORT MADISON, Mar.

14. (JP) George Sahlie, 24, of Huron, S. walked away from the In 1947, the pair played sue-1Iowa state penitentiary here last cessfully all over Europe. Babe night, the state highway patrol shed 75 pounds and wasn't happy reported. with the experience.

"I tasted Sahlie was working at the pris- first whale meat and my firstionpowderhouse, outside the walls, he said sourly. He! when he walked away about 8:30 up to his standardjp.m. (CST), the highway patrol horse meat is now back 295 pounds. Hardy offered a reason their recent inactivity. "The producers don't seem to want to be associated with slapstick comedy; they think it hurts He "had been sentenced in for July, 1945, from Woodbury County for larceny of a motor vehicle.

Prison authorities described Sahlie as six feet, three inches tall, 185 pounds with brown hair their he said. ''Actual-land eyes. He was wearing blue ly, ours was more situation com- denim prison clothing when he es- edy than slapstick." He hoped (as dp I) that film makers would realize the public's thirst for laughs. caped. Sahlie has a heart with the initials "G.S." tattooed on one arm and the letters tattoo- at the schoolhouse gymi they were first released." "Why, some of our old pictures ed on the knuckles of his lefl have been appearing o'n televis-jhand, the highway patrol report- 1 he said, "and we get moreied.

fan mail now than we did when' Wednesday evening, March 16, at 8 o'clock, by members of the Homestakers Club. The play will be repeated March 19 at Hitchcock. The title role of Yimmie will be taken by Iven Jacobson. Others in the cast are Delbert Miller, Babe said that he and Stan have never had any friction. "Why should we We both do different things profes- isionally.

What I do, he can't do, 'and vice versa. "Another thing--we never see each other between engagements. Elwood Peterson. Lyle both have different hobbies; Harold Winegar, LuVerne Peterson, Mabel Winegar, Rubin Funk, Theone Marshall and Lorraine Jacobson. Proceeds of the play will go for improvements on the church.

Bartenders At Redfield Fined REDFIELD, Mar. Klees, bartender at the Crystal markets, the Institute Pool Hall here, and. James G. er near Milltown, 10 miles east of here, today for the body of Johnny Brink, fz, believed to have drowned. The boy, son of Mr.

and Mrs. Bud Brink, who live near Milltown, has been missing since 2 p. m. Saturday. Workers began dragging the ice-jammed river Saturday night.

WMMAM MOTOt MM bvy In tew. i. Motor to work. BIRTHDAY PARTY REDFIELD, Mar. 14 Mrs.

For- I play golf and he likes to fish. He's the kind who can sit on the end of a line all day." Babe said he discussed the single role with Stan, who said to go ahead. "He even called me up at seven this morning to wish me luck on my first day," Hardvj said. He's going ahead with his separate career and will do a role in "Riding High" with Bing Crosby. But the boys may get back together in a picture for Glenn McCarthy productions.

I jBenmng, bartender at the Farm- mjs th ir wonderful ers Club were each fined $10 and fi er in the eve and brick on costs of $5.70 when they appear-' Joan Bennett Is Grandma At 39 HOLLYWOOD, Mar. 14. -Sultry-voiced Joan Bennett at 39 is a grandma. A seven-pound girl was born last night to the screen star's eldest daughter, Mrs. Diana Anderson.

The father is John Hardy Anderson, aircraft parts manufactur- Dakota Aviation Co. W. W. Municipal Airport are invifed to see the NEW PLYMOUTH On Display Friday, March 18 Sons Headquarters for Chrysler Corporation Parts and Service 363 Wisconsin S. W.

Phone 3080 I I A I I By: Luckee Girl Blacks Bronzes Greys Honey Almonds Morning Mists 45 Gauge--20 Denier $1.29 SI Gauge--20 Denier $1.45 S4 Gauge--15 Denier $1.65 Fusfield's Shoe Dept. ed before Justice of the Peace J. Sires entertained four boysJD. Fargo, Friday morning, on a 'and four girls Friday afternoon in charge of permitting the con- of her yon Barry's intoxicating MATINEE AT 2:15 P.M. EVENING P.M.

i honor Ibirthdav. liquor Lunch, served by Bar-iin an off sale place. This offense e-foot brand of humor. LODGE HAS STAG HIGHMORE, Mar. IOOF had a card party at the hall, ry's mother and his aunt, violates chapter 10 of 1941 state) Tuesday evening.

It proved to be birth-lsession laws as the "Anti-j an enjoyable affair with 50 mem- 'bers present. Whist was played present were Klees and Banning were eleven tables and the pool table Scotiie Benings, Robert'gjj their respective places for was kept busy until a late hour. iSiering. Connie Walton, Ilene Me- Hing high-point beer in an off ILur.ch was served by a coir.mili.cci 'Clyde Grauman, featured a cake baked by Mrs. Mamie.Spiking Law." "Any car without new individual, inner-spring front shock suspension is Xoil, Linda and Diane Fliehe.

i sell ing high-poin 'sale place March 9. from the Rtbckiih Lodge. lt OINfML llicratc WASHIR--8-Ib capacity mulling action Adjustable wringer Permadrive mechanism Removable balloon rolls Self-tilting drainboard Full-length akirt Quick-emptying pump One-year written warranty. PONT ABU ROTARY IKONIR--110 square inches of ironing-shoe surface 22-indi roll Open end for easy ironing left- ot right-hand control Thermostat to control temperatures Permanently lubricated mechanism Only 35 pounds One-year written warranty. 0.

S. ELECTRIC Free Estimates On Wiring Bancroft, S. D. B.F. Goodrich DEFIANCE Here's low cost mileage for you! Now-- you can get a tough, dependable B.F.Good rich Defiance at rock bottom prices.

It's a quality tire that'll give you long, safe mileage, quick (tops--and the heavy duty breaker means extra bruise protectior, too. It all adds up to a VALUE you won't want miss. Buy today sale lasts ten days only. I B.F.Goo*dck I I carries lifetime Extra Liberal Trade-In Allowance on B. F.

Goodrich Silver towns You can ride on top quality B.F.Goodricb Silvertowns for less than you think: Take advantage of our liberal trade-in allowance trade your used tires now for a set of Silvertowns. You'll money and" miles ahead. I.2S Wk. Putiat.OO-16 en B. F.

GOODRICH Engineered for comfort! Drive the roughest roads! less bounce over bumps-Less side-sway on curves! To a new distribution of mass and load has "been added a sturdy new frame, an engine so vibration-free you can scarcely hear it, finger-tip steering, new, longer- springs. Inside you'll find wide, wide seats, deep and These are just a few of the 103 new features in the 1949 Kaiser backed up by the RUGGED RELIABILITY proved by 330,000 owners in over three billion miles of postwar driving. In a Kaiser you get more for yoar money! You'll be surprised to learn how little it costs you to drive a Kaiser. See your local dealer! Kaiser Traveler. The Kaiser Special $2328.57 The Kaiser De Luxe new Kaiser model, now in production--available White sidewall tirea available on ail modetfi at extra cost.

Prices include factory-installed acceworio READY TO Oil VL Transportation, stale and local -if any) extra. Pricca subjetf to change vnthout notice. 217 Dakota S. Most-copied cars in America KAISER-FRAZER Dealers wherever you go Hear: Heirl Heir! Every DECIDE!.

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About The Daily Plainsman Archive

Pages Available:
108,504
Years Available:
1886-1973